From: ms Date: Thu, 18 May 2006 11:39:26 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Geändert: X-Git-Tag: v2.3-beta1~1130 X-Git-Url: http://git.ipfire.org/?p=ipfire-2.x.git;a=commitdiff_plain;h=3796e3d5bd528f6e8fb19c3843c586191ba32c4b Geändert: * Erste Postfix-Standard-Konfiguration git-svn-id: http://svn.ipfire.org/svn/ipfire/trunk@124 ea5c0bd1-69bd-2848-81d8-4f18e57aeed8 --- diff --git a/config/etc/aliases b/config/etc/aliases deleted file mode 100644 index 6363e24544..0000000000 --- a/config/etc/aliases +++ /dev/null @@ -1,3 +0,0 @@ -# /etc/aliases -postmaster: root - diff --git a/config/etc/passwd b/config/etc/passwd index 65a5e59e86..a0b2aa73c7 100644 --- a/config/etc/passwd +++ b/config/etc/passwd @@ -16,4 +16,4 @@ postfix:x:1000:100::/var/spool/postfix:/bin/false stunnel:x:51:51:Stunnel Daemon:/var/lib/stunnel:/bin/false clamav:x:109:109:Clam AntiVirus:/home/clamav:/bin/false rsyncd:x:48:48:rsyncd Daemon:/home/rsync:/bin/false -amavis:x:110:110:Amavisd-new user:/home/amavis: +amavis:x:110:110:Amavisd-new user:/var/amavis: diff --git a/config/postfix/access b/config/postfix/access new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..79946780b9 --- /dev/null +++ b/config/postfix/access @@ -0,0 +1,374 @@ +# ACCESS(5) ACCESS(5) +# +# NAME +# access - Postfix access table format +# +# SYNOPSIS +# postmap /etc/postfix/access +# +# postmap -q "string" /etc/postfix/access +# +# postmap -q - /etc/postfix/access as the lookup key for such addresses. The value is +# specified with the smtpd_null_access_lookup_key parameter +# in the Postfix main.cf file. +# +# EMAIL ADDRESS EXTENSION +# When a mail address localpart contains the optional recip- +# ient delimiter (e.g., user+foo@domain), the lookup order +# becomes: user+foo@domain, user@domain, domain, user+foo@, +# and user@. +# +# HOST NAME/ADDRESS PATTERNS +# With lookups from indexed files such as DB or DBM, or from +# networked tables such as NIS, LDAP or SQL, the following +# lookup patterns are examined in the order as listed: +# +# domain.tld +# Matches domain.tld. +# +# The pattern domain.tld also matches subdomains, but +# only when the string smtpd_access_maps is listed in +# the Postfix parent_domain_matches_subdomains con- +# figuration setting. Otherwise, specify .domain.tld +# (note the initial dot) in order to match subdo- +# mains. +# +# net.work.addr.ess +# +# net.work.addr +# +# net.work +# +# net Matches the specified IPv4 host address or subnet- +# work. An IPv4 host address is a sequence of four +# decimal octets separated by ".". +# +# Subnetworks are matched by repeatedly truncating +# the last ".octet" from the remote IPv4 host address +# string until a match is found in the access table, +# or until further truncation is not possible. +# +# NOTE 1: The information in the access map should be +# in canonical form, with unnecessary null characters +# eliminated. Address information must not be +# enclosed with "[]" characters. +# +# NOTE 2: use the cidr lookup table type to specify +# network/netmask patterns. See cidr_table(5) for +# details. +# +# net:work:addr:ess +# +# net:work:addr +# +# net:work +# +# net Matches the specified IPv6 host address or subnet- +# work. An IPv6 host address is a sequence of three +# to eight hexadecimal octet pairs separated by ":". +# +# Subnetworks are matched by repeatedly truncating +# the last ":octetpair" from the remote IPv6 host +# address string until a match is found in the access +# table, or until further truncation is not possible. +# +# NOTE 1: the truncation and comparison are done with +# the string representation of the IPv6 host address. +# Thus, not all the ":" subnetworks will be tried. +# +# NOTE 2: The information in the access map should be +# in canonical form, with unnecessary null characters +# eliminated. Address information must not be +# enclosed with "[]" characters. +# +# NOTE 3: use the cidr lookup table type to specify +# network/netmask patterns. See cidr_table(5) for +# details. +# +# IPv6 support is available in Postfix 2.2 and later. +# +# ACCEPT ACTIONS +# OK Accept the address etc. that matches the pattern. +# +# all-numerical +# An all-numerical result is treated as OK. This for- +# mat is generated by address-based relay authoriza- +# tion schemes. +# +# REJECT ACTIONS +# 4NN text +# +# 5NN text +# Reject the address etc. that matches the pattern, +# and respond with the numerical three-digit code and +# text. 4NN means "try again later", while 5NN means +# "do not try again". +# +# REJECT optional text... +# Reject the address etc. that matches the pattern. +# Reply with $reject_code optional text... when the +# optional text is specified, otherwise reply with a +# generic error response message. +# +# DEFER_IF_REJECT optional text... +# Defer the request if some later restriction would +# result in a REJECT action. Reply with "450 optional +# text... when the optional text is specified, other- +# wise reply with a generic error response message. +# +# This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later. +# +# DEFER_IF_PERMIT optional text... +# Defer the request if some later restriction would +# result in a an explicit or implicit PERMIT action. +# Reply with "450 optional text... when the optional +# text is specified, otherwise reply with a generic +# error response message. +# +# This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later. +# +# OTHER ACTIONS +# restriction... +# Apply the named UCE restriction(s) (permit, reject, +# reject_unauth_destination, and so on). +# +# DISCARD optional text... +# Claim successful delivery and silently discard the +# message. Log the optional text if specified, oth- +# erwise log a generic message. +# +# Note: this action currently affects all recipients +# of the message. +# +# This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later. +# +# DUNNO Pretend that the lookup key was not found. This +# prevents Postfix from trying substrings of the +# lookup key (such as a subdomain name, or a network +# address subnetwork). +# +# This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later. +# +# FILTER transport:destination +# After the message is queued, send the entire mes- +# sage through the specified external content filter. +# The transport:destination syntax is described in +# the transport(5) manual page. More information +# about external content filters is in the Postfix +# FILTER_README file. +# +# Note: this action overrides the main.cf con- +# tent_filter setting, and currently affects all +# recipients of the message. +# +# This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later. +# +# HOLD optional text... +# Place the message on the hold queue, where it will +# sit until someone either deletes it or releases it +# for delivery. Log the optional text if specified, +# otherwise log a generic message. +# +# Mail that is placed on hold can be examined with +# the postcat(1) command, and can be destroyed or +# released with the postsuper(1) command. +# +# Note: use "postsuper -r" to release mail that was +# kept on hold for a significant fraction of $maxi- +# mal_queue_lifetime or $bounce_queue_lifetime, or +# longer. +# +# Note: this action currently affects all recipients +# of the message. +# +# This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later. +# +# PREPEND headername: headervalue +# Prepend the specified message header to the mes- +# sage. When this action is used multiple times, the +# first prepended header appears before the second +# etc. prepended header. +# +# Note: this action does not support multi-line mes- +# sage headers. +# +# Note: this action must be used before the message +# content is received; it cannot be used in +# smtpd_end_of_data_restrictions. +# +# This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later. +# +# REDIRECT user@domain +# After the message is queued, send the message to +# the specified address instead of the intended +# recipient(s). +# +# Note: this action overrides the FILTER action, and +# currently affects all recipients of the message. +# +# This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later. +# +# WARN optional text... +# Log a warning with the optional text, together with +# client information and if available, with helo, +# sender, recipient and protocol information. +# +# This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later. +# +# REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES +# This section describes how the table lookups change when +# the table is given in the form of regular expressions. For +# a description of regular expression lookup table syntax, +# see regexp_table(5) or pcre_table(5). +# +# Each pattern is a regular expression that is applied to +# the entire string being looked up. Depending on the appli- +# cation, that string is an entire client hostname, an +# entire client IP address, or an entire mail address. Thus, +# no parent domain or parent network search is done, +# user@domain mail addresses are not broken up into their +# user@ and domain constituent parts, nor is user+foo broken +# up into user and foo. +# +# Patterns are applied in the order as specified in the ta- +# ble, until a pattern is found that matches the search +# string. +# +# Actions are the same as with indexed file lookups, with +# the additional feature that parenthesized substrings from +# the pattern can be interpolated as $1, $2 and so on. +# +# TCP-BASED TABLES +# This section describes how the table lookups change when +# lookups are directed to a TCP-based server. For a descrip- +# tion of the TCP client/server lookup protocol, see tcp_ta- +# ble(5). This feature is not available up to and including +# Postfix version 2.2. +# +# Each lookup operation uses the entire query string once. +# Depending on the application, that string is an entire +# client hostname, an entire client IP address, or an entire +# mail address. Thus, no parent domain or parent network +# search is done, user@domain mail addresses are not broken +# up into their user@ and domain constituent parts, nor is +# user+foo broken up into user and foo. +# +# Actions are the same as with indexed file lookups. +# +# EXAMPLE +# The following example uses an indexed file, so that the +# order of table entries does not matter. The example per- +# mits access by the client at address 1.2.3.4 but rejects +# all other clients in 1.2.3.0/24. Instead of hash lookup +# tables, some systems use dbm. Use the command "postconf +# -m" to find out what lookup tables Postfix supports on +# your system. +# +# /etc/postfix/main.cf: +# smtpd_client_restrictions = +# check_client_access hash:/etc/postfix/access +# +# /etc/postfix/access: +# 1.2.3 REJECT +# 1.2.3.4 OK +# +# Execute the command "postmap /etc/postfix/access" after +# editing the file. +# +# BUGS +# The table format does not understand quoting conventions. +# +# SEE ALSO +# postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager +# smtpd(8), SMTP server +# postconf(5), configuration parameters +# transport(5), transport:nexthop syntax +# +# README FILES +# Use "postconf readme_directory" or "postconf html_direc- +# tory" to locate this information. +# SMTPD_ACCESS_README, built-in SMTP server access control +# DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview +# +# LICENSE +# The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this +# software. +# +# AUTHOR(S) +# Wietse Venema +# IBM T.J. Watson Research +# P.O. Box 704 +# Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, USA +# +# ACCESS(5) diff --git a/config/postfix/aliases b/config/postfix/aliases new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..6738a155da --- /dev/null +++ b/config/postfix/aliases @@ -0,0 +1,218 @@ +# +# Sample aliases file. Install in the location as specified by the +# output from the command "postconf alias_maps". Typical path names +# are /etc/aliases or /etc/mail/aliases. +# +# >>>>>>>>>> The program "newaliases" must be run after +# >> NOTE >> this file is updated for any changes to +# >>>>>>>>>> show through to Postfix. +# + +# Person who should get root's mail. Don't receive mail as root! +#root: you + +# Basic system aliases -- these MUST be present +MAILER-DAEMON: postmaster +postmaster: root + +# General redirections for pseudo accounts +bin: root +daemon: root +named: root +nobody: root +uucp: root +www: root +ftp-bugs: root +postfix: root + +# Put your local aliases here. + +# Well-known aliases +manager: root +dumper: root +operator: root +abuse: postmaster + +# trap decode to catch security attacks +decode: root + +# ALIASES(5) ALIASES(5) +# +# NAME +# aliases - Postfix local alias database format +# +# SYNOPSIS +# newaliases +# +# DESCRIPTION +# The aliases(5) table provides a system-wide mechanism to +# redirect mail for local recipients. The redirections are +# processed by the Postfix local(8) delivery agent. +# +# Normally, the aliases(5) table is specified as a text file +# that serves as input to the postalias(1) command. The +# result, an indexed file in dbm or db format, is used for +# fast lookup by the mail system. Execute the command +# newaliases in order to rebuild the indexed file after +# changing the Postfix alias database. +# +# The input and output file formats are expected to be com- +# patible with Sendmail version 8, and are expected to be +# suitable for the use as NIS maps. +# +# Users can control delivery of their own mail by setting up +# .forward files in their home directory. Lines in per-user +# .forward files have the same syntax as the right-hand side +# of aliases(5) entries. +# +# The format of the alias database input file is as follows: +# +# o An alias definition has the form +# +# name: value1, value2, ... +# +# o Empty lines and whitespace-only lines are ignored, +# as are lines whose first non-whitespace character +# is a `#'. +# +# o A logical line starts with non-whitespace text. A +# line that starts with whitespace continues a logi- +# cal line. +# +# The name is a local address (no domain part). Use double +# quotes when the name contains any special characters such +# as whitespace, `#', `:', or `@'. The name is folded to +# lowercase, in order to make database lookups case insensi- +# tive. +# +# In addition, when an alias exists for owner-name, delivery +# diagnostics are directed to that address, instead of to +# the originator. This is typically used to direct delivery +# errors to the owner of a mailing list, who is in a better +# position to deal with mailing list delivery problems than +# the originator of the undelivered mail. +# +# The value contains one or more of the following: +# +# address +# Mail is forwarded to address, which is compatible +# with the RFC 822 standard. +# +# /file/name +# Mail is appended to /file/name. See local(8) for +# details of delivery to file. Delivery is not lim- +# ited to regular files. For example, to dispose of +# unwanted mail, deflect it to /dev/null. +# +# |command +# Mail is piped into command. Commands that contain +# special characters, such as whitespace, should be +# enclosed between double quotes. See local(8) for +# details of delivery to command. +# +# When the command fails, a limited amount of command +# output is mailed back to the sender. The file +# /usr/include/sysexits.h defines the expected exit +# status codes. For example, use |"exit 67" to simu- +# late a "user unknown" error, and |"exit 0" to +# implement an expensive black hole. +# +# :include:/file/name +# Mail is sent to the destinations listed in the +# named file. Lines in :include: files have the same +# syntax as the right-hand side of alias entries. +# +# A destination can be any destination that is +# described in this manual page. However, delivery to +# "|command" and /file/name is disallowed by default. +# To enable, edit the allow_mail_to_commands and +# allow_mail_to_files configuration parameters. +# +# ADDRESS EXTENSION +# When alias database search fails, and the recipient local- +# part contains the optional recipient delimiter (e.g., +# user+foo), the search is repeated for the unextended +# address (e.g., user). +# +# The propagate_unmatched_extensions parameter controls +# whether an unmatched address extension (+foo) is propa- +# gated to the result of table lookup. +# +# SECURITY +# The local(8) delivery agent disallows regular expression +# substitution of $1 etc. in alias_maps, because that would +# open a security hole. +# +# The local(8) delivery agent will silently ignore requests +# to use the proxymap(8) server within alias_maps. Instead +# it will open the table directly. Before Postfix version +# 2.2, the local(8) delivery agent will terminate with a +# fatal error. +# +# CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS +# The following main.cf parameters are especially relevant. +# The text below provides only a parameter summary. See +# postconf(5) for more details including examples. +# +# alias_database +# List of alias databases that are updated by the +# newaliases(1) command. +# +# alias_maps +# List of alias databases queried by the local(8) +# delivery agent. +# +# allow_mail_to_commands +# Restrict the usage of mail delivery to external +# command. +# +# allow_mail_to_files +# Restrict the usage of mail delivery to external +# file. +# +# expand_owner_alias +# When delivering to an alias that has an owner- com- +# panion alias, set the envelope sender address to +# the right-hand side of the owner alias, instead +# using of the left-hand side address. +# +# propagate_unmatched_extensions +# A list of address rewriting or forwarding mecha- +# nisms that propagate an address extension from the +# original address to the result. Specify zero or +# more of canonical, virtual, alias, forward, +# include, or generic. +# +# owner_request_special +# Give special treatment to owner-listname and list- +# name-request addresses. +# +# recipient_delimiter +# Delimiter that separates recipients from address +# extensions. +# +# STANDARDS +# RFC 822 (ARPA Internet Text Messages) +# +# SEE ALSO +# local(8), local delivery agent +# newaliases(1), create/update alias database +# postalias(1), create/update alias database +# postconf(5), configuration parameters +# +# README FILES +# Use "postconf readme_directory" or "postconf html_direc- +# tory" to locate this information. +# DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview +# +# LICENSE +# The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this +# software. +# +# AUTHOR(S) +# Wietse Venema +# IBM T.J. Watson Research +# P.O. Box 704 +# Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, USA +# +# ALIASES(5) diff --git a/config/postfix/canonical b/config/postfix/canonical new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..6f75508c39 --- /dev/null +++ b/config/postfix/canonical @@ -0,0 +1,266 @@ +# CANONICAL(5) CANONICAL(5) +# +# NAME +# canonical - Postfix canonical table format +# +# SYNOPSIS +# postmap /etc/postfix/canonical +# +# postmap -q "string" /etc/postfix/canonical +# +# postmap -q - /etc/postfix/canonical $/ +# REJECT IFRAME vulnerability exploit +# +# SEE ALSO +# cleanup(8), canonicalize and enqueue Postfix message +# pcre_table(5), format of PCRE lookup tables +# regexp_table(5), format of POSIX regular expression tables +# postconf(1), Postfix configuration utility +# postmap(1), Postfix lookup table management +# postsuper(1), Postfix janitor +# postcat(1), show Postfix queue file contents +# RFC 2045, base64 and quoted-printable encoding rules +# RFC 2047, message header encoding for non-ASCII text +# +# README FILES +# Use "postconf readme_directory" or "postconf html_direc- +# tory" to locate this information. +# DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview +# CONTENT_INSPECTION_README, Postfix content inspection overview +# BUILTIN_FILTER_README, Postfix built-in content inspection +# BACKSCATTER_README, blocking returned forged mail +# +# LICENSE +# The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this +# software. +# +# AUTHOR(S) +# Wietse Venema +# IBM T.J. Watson Research +# P.O. Box 704 +# Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, USA +# +# HEADER_CHECKS(5) diff --git a/config/postfix/main.cf b/config/postfix/main.cf new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..ecd0f2c280 --- /dev/null +++ b/config/postfix/main.cf @@ -0,0 +1,644 @@ +# Global Postfix configuration file. This file lists only a subset +# of all 300+ parameters. See the postconf(5) manual page for a +# complete list. +# +# The general format of each line is: parameter = value. Lines +# that begin with whitespace continue the previous line. A value can +# contain references to other $names or ${name}s. +# +# NOTE - CHANGE NO MORE THAN 2-3 PARAMETERS AT A TIME, AND TEST IF +# POSTFIX STILL WORKS AFTER EVERY CHANGE. + +# SOFT BOUNCE +# +# The soft_bounce parameter provides a limited safety net for +# testing. When soft_bounce is enabled, mail will remain queued that +# would otherwise bounce. This parameter disables locally-generated +# bounces, and prevents the SMTP server from rejecting mail permanently +# (by changing 5xx replies into 4xx replies). However, soft_bounce +# is no cure for address rewriting mistakes or mail routing mistakes. +# +#soft_bounce = no + +# LOCAL PATHNAME INFORMATION +# +# The queue_directory specifies the location of the Postfix queue. +# This is also the root directory of Postfix daemons that run chrooted. +# See the files in examples/chroot-setup for setting up Postfix chroot +# environments on different UNIX systems. +# +queue_directory = /var/spool/postfix + +# The command_directory parameter specifies the location of all +# postXXX commands. +# +command_directory = /usr/sbin + +# The daemon_directory parameter specifies the location of all Postfix +# daemon programs (i.e. programs listed in the master.cf file). This +# directory must be owned by root. +# +daemon_directory = /usr/lib/postfix + +# QUEUE AND PROCESS OWNERSHIP +# +# The mail_owner parameter specifies the owner of the Postfix queue +# and of most Postfix daemon processes. Specify the name of a user +# account THAT DOES NOT SHARE ITS USER OR GROUP ID WITH OTHER ACCOUNTS +# AND THAT OWNS NO OTHER FILES OR PROCESSES ON THE SYSTEM. In +# particular, don't specify nobody or daemon. PLEASE USE A DEDICATED +# USER. +# +mail_owner = postfix + +# The default_privs parameter specifies the default rights used by +# the local delivery agent for delivery to external file or command. +# These rights are used in the absence of a recipient user context. +# DO NOT SPECIFY A PRIVILEGED USER OR THE POSTFIX OWNER. +# +#default_privs = nobody + +# INTERNET HOST AND DOMAIN NAMES +# +# The myhostname parameter specifies the internet hostname of this +# mail system. The default is to use the fully-qualified domain name +# from gethostname(). $myhostname is used as a default value for many +# other configuration parameters. +# +#myhostname = host.domain.tld +#myhostname = virtual.domain.tld + +# The mydomain parameter specifies the local internet domain name. +# The default is to use $myhostname minus the first component. +# $mydomain is used as a default value for many other configuration +# parameters. +# +#mydomain = domain.tld + +# SENDING MAIL +# +# The myorigin parameter specifies the domain that locally-posted +# mail appears to come from. The default is to append $myhostname, +# which is fine for small sites. If you run a domain with multiple +# machines, you should (1) change this to $mydomain and (2) set up +# a domain-wide alias database that aliases each user to +# user@that.users.mailhost. +# +# For the sake of consistency between sender and recipient addresses, +# myorigin also specifies the default domain name that is appended +# to recipient addresses that have no @domain part. +# +#myorigin = $myhostname +#myorigin = $mydomain + +# RECEIVING MAIL + +# The inet_interfaces parameter specifies the network interface +# addresses that this mail system receives mail on. By default, +# the software claims all active interfaces on the machine. The +# parameter also controls delivery of mail to user@[ip.address]. +# +# See also the proxy_interfaces parameter, for network addresses that +# are forwarded to us via a proxy or network address translator. +# +# Note: you need to stop/start Postfix when this parameter changes. +# +#inet_interfaces = all +#inet_interfaces = $myhostname +#inet_interfaces = $myhostname, localhost + +# The proxy_interfaces parameter specifies the network interface +# addresses that this mail system receives mail on by way of a +# proxy or network address translation unit. This setting extends +# the address list specified with the inet_interfaces parameter. +# +# You must specify your proxy/NAT addresses when your system is a +# backup MX host for other domains, otherwise mail delivery loops +# will happen when the primary MX host is down. +# +#proxy_interfaces = +#proxy_interfaces = 1.2.3.4 + +# The mydestination parameter specifies the list of domains that this +# machine considers itself the final destination for. +# +# These domains are routed to the delivery agent specified with the +# local_transport parameter setting. By default, that is the UNIX +# compatible delivery agent that lookups all recipients in /etc/passwd +# and /etc/aliases or their equivalent. +# +# The default is $myhostname + localhost.$mydomain. On a mail domain +# gateway, you should also include $mydomain. +# +# Do not specify the names of virtual domains - those domains are +# specified elsewhere (see VIRTUAL_README). +# +# Do not specify the names of domains that this machine is backup MX +# host for. Specify those names via the relay_domains settings for +# the SMTP server, or use permit_mx_backup if you are lazy (see +# STANDARD_CONFIGURATION_README). +# +# The local machine is always the final destination for mail addressed +# to user@[the.net.work.address] of an interface that the mail system +# receives mail on (see the inet_interfaces parameter). +# +# Specify a list of host or domain names, /file/name or type:table +# patterns, separated by commas and/or whitespace. A /file/name +# pattern is replaced by its contents; a type:table is matched when +# a name matches a lookup key (the right-hand side is ignored). +# Continue long lines by starting the next line with whitespace. +# +# See also below, section "REJECTING MAIL FOR UNKNOWN LOCAL USERS". +# +#mydestination = $myhostname, localhost.$mydomain, localhost +#mydestination = $myhostname, localhost.$mydomain, localhost, $mydomain +#mydestination = $myhostname, localhost.$mydomain, localhost, $mydomain, +# mail.$mydomain, www.$mydomain, ftp.$mydomain + +# REJECTING MAIL FOR UNKNOWN LOCAL USERS +# +# The local_recipient_maps parameter specifies optional lookup tables +# with all names or addresses of users that are local with respect +# to $mydestination, $inet_interfaces or $proxy_interfaces. +# +# If this parameter is defined, then the SMTP server will reject +# mail for unknown local users. This parameter is defined by default. +# +# To turn off local recipient checking in the SMTP server, specify +# local_recipient_maps = (i.e. empty). +# +# The default setting assumes that you use the default Postfix local +# delivery agent for local delivery. You need to update the +# local_recipient_maps setting if: +# +# - You define $mydestination domain recipients in files other than +# /etc/passwd, /etc/aliases, or the $virtual_alias_maps files. +# For example, you define $mydestination domain recipients in +# the $virtual_mailbox_maps files. +# +# - You redefine the local delivery agent in master.cf. +# +# - You redefine the "local_transport" setting in main.cf. +# +# - You use the "luser_relay", "mailbox_transport", or "fallback_transport" +# feature of the Postfix local delivery agent (see local(8)). +# +# Details are described in the LOCAL_RECIPIENT_README file. +# +# Beware: if the Postfix SMTP server runs chrooted, you probably have +# to access the passwd file via the proxymap service, in order to +# overcome chroot restrictions. The alternative, having a copy of +# the system passwd file in the chroot jail is just not practical. +# +# The right-hand side of the lookup tables is conveniently ignored. +# In the left-hand side, specify a bare username, an @domain.tld +# wild-card, or specify a user@domain.tld address. +# +#local_recipient_maps = unix:passwd.byname $alias_maps +#local_recipient_maps = proxy:unix:passwd.byname $alias_maps +#local_recipient_maps = + +# The unknown_local_recipient_reject_code specifies the SMTP server +# response code when a recipient domain matches $mydestination or +# ${proxy,inet}_interfaces, while $local_recipient_maps is non-empty +# and the recipient address or address local-part is not found. +# +# The default setting is 550 (reject mail) but it is safer to start +# with 450 (try again later) until you are certain that your +# local_recipient_maps settings are OK. +# +unknown_local_recipient_reject_code = 550 + +# TRUST AND RELAY CONTROL + +# The mynetworks parameter specifies the list of "trusted" SMTP +# clients that have more privileges than "strangers". +# +# In particular, "trusted" SMTP clients are allowed to relay mail +# through Postfix. See the smtpd_recipient_restrictions parameter +# in postconf(5). +# +# You can specify the list of "trusted" network addresses by hand +# or you can let Postfix do it for you (which is the default). +# +# By default (mynetworks_style = subnet), Postfix "trusts" SMTP +# clients in the same IP subnetworks as the local machine. +# On Linux, this does works correctly only with interfaces specified +# with the "ifconfig" command. +# +# Specify "mynetworks_style = class" when Postfix should "trust" SMTP +# clients in the same IP class A/B/C networks as the local machine. +# Don't do this with a dialup site - it would cause Postfix to "trust" +# your entire provider's network. Instead, specify an explicit +# mynetworks list by hand, as described below. +# +# Specify "mynetworks_style = host" when Postfix should "trust" +# only the local machine. +# +#mynetworks_style = class +#mynetworks_style = subnet +#mynetworks_style = host + +# Alternatively, you can specify the mynetworks list by hand, in +# which case Postfix ignores the mynetworks_style setting. +# +# Specify an explicit list of network/netmask patterns, where the +# mask specifies the number of bits in the network part of a host +# address. +# +# You can also specify the absolute pathname of a pattern file instead +# of listing the patterns here. Specify type:table for table-based lookups +# (the value on the table right-hand side is not used). +# +#mynetworks = 168.100.189.0/28, 127.0.0.0/8 +#mynetworks = $config_directory/mynetworks +#mynetworks = hash:/etc/postfix/network_table + +# The relay_domains parameter restricts what destinations this system will +# relay mail to. See the smtpd_recipient_restrictions description in +# postconf(5) for detailed information. +# +# By default, Postfix relays mail +# - from "trusted" clients (IP address matches $mynetworks) to any destination, +# - from "untrusted" clients to destinations that match $relay_domains or +# subdomains thereof, except addresses with sender-specified routing. +# The default relay_domains value is $mydestination. +# +# In addition to the above, the Postfix SMTP server by default accepts mail +# that Postfix is final destination for: +# - destinations that match $inet_interfaces or $proxy_interfaces, +# - destinations that match $mydestination +# - destinations that match $virtual_alias_domains, +# - destinations that match $virtual_mailbox_domains. +# These destinations do not need to be listed in $relay_domains. +# +# Specify a list of hosts or domains, /file/name patterns or type:name +# lookup tables, separated by commas and/or whitespace. Continue +# long lines by starting the next line with whitespace. A file name +# is replaced by its contents; a type:name table is matched when a +# (parent) domain appears as lookup key. +# +# NOTE: Postfix will not automatically forward mail for domains that +# list this system as their primary or backup MX host. See the +# permit_mx_backup restriction description in postconf(5). +# +#relay_domains = $mydestination + +# INTERNET OR INTRANET + +# The relayhost parameter specifies the default host to send mail to +# when no entry is matched in the optional transport(5) table. When +# no relayhost is given, mail is routed directly to the destination. +# +# On an intranet, specify the organizational domain name. If your +# internal DNS uses no MX records, specify the name of the intranet +# gateway host instead. +# +# In the case of SMTP, specify a domain, host, host:port, [host]:port, +# [address] or [address]:port; the form [host] turns off MX lookups. +# +# If you're connected via UUCP, see also the default_transport parameter. +# +#relayhost = $mydomain +#relayhost = [gateway.my.domain] +#relayhost = [mailserver.isp.tld] +#relayhost = uucphost +#relayhost = [an.ip.add.ress] + +# REJECTING UNKNOWN RELAY USERS +# +# The relay_recipient_maps parameter specifies optional lookup tables +# with all addresses in the domains that match $relay_domains. +# +# If this parameter is defined, then the SMTP server will reject +# mail for unknown relay users. This feature is off by default. +# +# The right-hand side of the lookup tables is conveniently ignored. +# In the left-hand side, specify an @domain.tld wild-card, or specify +# a user@domain.tld address. +# +#relay_recipient_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/relay_recipients + +# INPUT RATE CONTROL +# +# The in_flow_delay configuration parameter implements mail input +# flow control. This feature is turned on by default, although it +# still needs further development (it's disabled on SCO UNIX due +# to an SCO bug). +# +# A Postfix process will pause for $in_flow_delay seconds before +# accepting a new message, when the message arrival rate exceeds the +# message delivery rate. With the default 100 SMTP server process +# limit, this limits the mail inflow to 100 messages a second more +# than the number of messages delivered per second. +# +# Specify 0 to disable the feature. Valid delays are 0..10. +# +#in_flow_delay = 1s + +# ADDRESS REWRITING +# +# The ADDRESS_REWRITING_README document gives information about +# address masquerading or other forms of address rewriting including +# username->Firstname.Lastname mapping. + +# ADDRESS REDIRECTION (VIRTUAL DOMAIN) +# +# The VIRTUAL_README document gives information about the many forms +# of domain hosting that Postfix supports. + +# "USER HAS MOVED" BOUNCE MESSAGES +# +# See the discussion in the ADDRESS_REWRITING_README document. + +# TRANSPORT MAP +# +# See the discussion in the ADDRESS_REWRITING_README document. + +# ALIAS DATABASE +# +# The alias_maps parameter specifies the list of alias databases used +# by the local delivery agent. The default list is system dependent. +# +# On systems with NIS, the default is to search the local alias +# database, then the NIS alias database. See aliases(5) for syntax +# details. +# +# If you change the alias database, run "postalias /etc/aliases" (or +# wherever your system stores the mail alias file), or simply run +# "newaliases" to build the necessary DBM or DB file. +# +# It will take a minute or so before changes become visible. Use +# "postfix reload" to eliminate the delay. +# +#alias_maps = dbm:/etc/aliases +#alias_maps = hash:/etc/aliases +#alias_maps = hash:/etc/aliases, nis:mail.aliases +#alias_maps = netinfo:/aliases + +# The alias_database parameter specifies the alias database(s) that +# are built with "newaliases" or "sendmail -bi". This is a separate +# configuration parameter, because alias_maps (see above) may specify +# tables that are not necessarily all under control by Postfix. +# +#alias_database = dbm:/etc/aliases +#alias_database = dbm:/etc/mail/aliases +#alias_database = hash:/etc/aliases +#alias_database = hash:/etc/aliases, hash:/opt/majordomo/aliases + +# ADDRESS EXTENSIONS (e.g., user+foo) +# +# The recipient_delimiter parameter specifies the separator between +# user names and address extensions (user+foo). See canonical(5), +# local(8), relocated(5) and virtual(5) for the effects this has on +# aliases, canonical, virtual, relocated and .forward file lookups. +# Basically, the software tries user+foo and .forward+foo before +# trying user and .forward. +# +#recipient_delimiter = + + +# DELIVERY TO MAILBOX +# +# The home_mailbox parameter specifies the optional pathname of a +# mailbox file relative to a user's home directory. The default +# mailbox file is /var/spool/mail/user or /var/mail/user. Specify +# "Maildir/" for qmail-style delivery (the / is required). +# +#home_mailbox = Mailbox +#home_mailbox = Maildir/ + +# The mail_spool_directory parameter specifies the directory where +# UNIX-style mailboxes are kept. The default setting depends on the +# system type. +# +#mail_spool_directory = /var/mail +#mail_spool_directory = /var/spool/mail + +# The mailbox_command parameter specifies the optional external +# command to use instead of mailbox delivery. The command is run as +# the recipient with proper HOME, SHELL and LOGNAME environment settings. +# Exception: delivery for root is done as $default_user. +# +# Other environment variables of interest: USER (recipient username), +# EXTENSION (address extension), DOMAIN (domain part of address), +# and LOCAL (the address localpart). +# +# Unlike other Postfix configuration parameters, the mailbox_command +# parameter is not subjected to $parameter substitutions. This is to +# make it easier to specify shell syntax (see example below). +# +# Avoid shell meta characters because they will force Postfix to run +# an expensive shell process. Procmail alone is expensive enough. +# +# IF YOU USE THIS TO DELIVER MAIL SYSTEM-WIDE, YOU MUST SET UP AN +# ALIAS THAT FORWARDS MAIL FOR ROOT TO A REAL USER. +# +#mailbox_command = /some/where/procmail +#mailbox_command = /some/where/procmail -a "$EXTENSION" + +# The mailbox_transport specifies the optional transport in master.cf +# to use after processing aliases and .forward files. This parameter +# has precedence over the mailbox_command, fallback_transport and +# luser_relay parameters. +# +# Specify a string of the form transport:nexthop, where transport is +# the name of a mail delivery transport defined in master.cf. The +# :nexthop part is optional. For more details see the sample transport +# configuration file. +# +# NOTE: if you use this feature for accounts not in the UNIX password +# file, then you must update the "local_recipient_maps" setting in +# the main.cf file, otherwise the SMTP server will reject mail for +# non-UNIX accounts with "User unknown in local recipient table". +# +#mailbox_transport = lmtp:unix:/file/name +#mailbox_transport = cyrus + +# The fallback_transport specifies the optional transport in master.cf +# to use for recipients that are not found in the UNIX passwd database. +# This parameter has precedence over the luser_relay parameter. +# +# Specify a string of the form transport:nexthop, where transport is +# the name of a mail delivery transport defined in master.cf. The +# :nexthop part is optional. For more details see the sample transport +# configuration file. +# +# NOTE: if you use this feature for accounts not in the UNIX password +# file, then you must update the "local_recipient_maps" setting in +# the main.cf file, otherwise the SMTP server will reject mail for +# non-UNIX accounts with "User unknown in local recipient table". +# +#fallback_transport = lmtp:unix:/file/name +#fallback_transport = cyrus +#fallback_transport = + +# The luser_relay parameter specifies an optional destination address +# for unknown recipients. By default, mail for unknown@$mydestination, +# unknown@[$inet_interfaces] or unknown@[$proxy_interfaces] is returned +# as undeliverable. +# +# The following expansions are done on luser_relay: $user (recipient +# username), $shell (recipient shell), $home (recipient home directory), +# $recipient (full recipient address), $extension (recipient address +# extension), $domain (recipient domain), $local (entire recipient +# localpart), $recipient_delimiter. Specify ${name?value} or +# ${name:value} to expand value only when $name does (does not) exist. +# +# luser_relay works only for the default Postfix local delivery agent. +# +# NOTE: if you use this feature for accounts not in the UNIX password +# file, then you must specify "local_recipient_maps =" (i.e. empty) in +# the main.cf file, otherwise the SMTP server will reject mail for +# non-UNIX accounts with "User unknown in local recipient table". +# +#luser_relay = $user@other.host +#luser_relay = $local@other.host +#luser_relay = admin+$local + +# JUNK MAIL CONTROLS +# +# The controls listed here are only a very small subset. The file +# SMTPD_ACCESS_README provides an overview. + +# The header_checks parameter specifies an optional table with patterns +# that each logical message header is matched against, including +# headers that span multiple physical lines. +# +# By default, these patterns also apply to MIME headers and to the +# headers of attached messages. With older Postfix versions, MIME and +# attached message headers were treated as body text. +# +# For details, see "man header_checks". +# +#header_checks = regexp:/etc/postfix/header_checks + +# FAST ETRN SERVICE +# +# Postfix maintains per-destination logfiles with information about +# deferred mail, so that mail can be flushed quickly with the SMTP +# "ETRN domain.tld" command, or by executing "sendmail -qRdomain.tld". +# See the ETRN_README document for a detailed description. +# +# The fast_flush_domains parameter controls what destinations are +# eligible for this service. By default, they are all domains that +# this server is willing to relay mail to. +# +#fast_flush_domains = $relay_domains + +# SHOW SOFTWARE VERSION OR NOT +# +# The smtpd_banner parameter specifies the text that follows the 220 +# code in the SMTP server's greeting banner. Some people like to see +# the mail version advertised. By default, Postfix shows no version. +# +# You MUST specify $myhostname at the start of the text. That is an +# RFC requirement. Postfix itself does not care. +# +#smtpd_banner = $myhostname ESMTP $mail_name +#smtpd_banner = $myhostname ESMTP $mail_name ($mail_version) + +# PARALLEL DELIVERY TO THE SAME DESTINATION +# +# How many parallel deliveries to the same user or domain? With local +# delivery, it does not make sense to do massively parallel delivery +# to the same user, because mailbox updates must happen sequentially, +# and expensive pipelines in .forward files can cause disasters when +# too many are run at the same time. With SMTP deliveries, 10 +# simultaneous connections to the same domain could be sufficient to +# raise eyebrows. +# +# Each message delivery transport has its XXX_destination_concurrency_limit +# parameter. The default is $default_destination_concurrency_limit for +# most delivery transports. For the local delivery agent the default is 2. + +#local_destination_concurrency_limit = 2 +#default_destination_concurrency_limit = 20 + +# DEBUGGING CONTROL +# +# The debug_peer_level parameter specifies the increment in verbose +# logging level when an SMTP client or server host name or address +# matches a pattern in the debug_peer_list parameter. +# +debug_peer_level = 2 + +# The debug_peer_list parameter specifies an optional list of domain +# or network patterns, /file/name patterns or type:name tables. When +# an SMTP client or server host name or address matches a pattern, +# increase the verbose logging level by the amount specified in the +# debug_peer_level parameter. +# +#debug_peer_list = 127.0.0.1 +#debug_peer_list = some.domain + +# The debugger_command specifies the external command that is executed +# when a Postfix daemon program is run with the -D option. +# +# Use "command .. & sleep 5" so that the debugger can attach before +# the process marches on. If you use an X-based debugger, be sure to +# set up your XAUTHORITY environment variable before starting Postfix. +# +debugger_command = + PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin + xxgdb $daemon_directory/$process_name $process_id & sleep 5 + +# If you can't use X, use this to capture the call stack when a +# daemon crashes. The result is in a file in the configuration +# directory, and is named after the process name and the process ID. +# +# debugger_command = +# PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin; export PATH; (echo cont; +# echo where) | gdb $daemon_directory/$process_name $process_id 2>&1 +# >$config_directory/$process_name.$process_id.log & sleep 5 +# +# Another possibility is to run gdb under a detached screen session. +# To attach to the screen sesssion, su root and run "screen -r +# " where uniquely matches one of the detached +# sessions (from "screen -list"). +# +# debugger_command = +# PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin; export PATH; screen +# -dmS $process_name gdb $daemon_directory/$process_name +# $process_id & sleep 1 + +# INSTALL-TIME CONFIGURATION INFORMATION +# +# The following parameters are used when installing a new Postfix version. +# +# sendmail_path: The full pathname of the Postfix sendmail command. +# This is the Sendmail-compatible mail posting interface. +# +sendmail_path = /usr/sbin/sendmail + +# newaliases_path: The full pathname of the Postfix newaliases command. +# This is the Sendmail-compatible command to build alias databases. +# +newaliases_path = /usr/bin/newaliases + +# mailq_path: The full pathname of the Postfix mailq command. This +# is the Sendmail-compatible mail queue listing command. +# +mailq_path = /usr/bin/mailq + +# setgid_group: The group for mail submission and queue management +# commands. This must be a group name with a numerical group ID that +# is not shared with other accounts, not even with the Postfix account. +# +setgid_group = postdrop + +# html_directory: The location of the Postfix HTML documentation. +# +html_directory = no + +# manpage_directory: The location of the Postfix on-line manual pages. +# +manpage_directory = /usr/share/man + +# sample_directory: The location of the Postfix sample configuration files. +# This parameter is obsolete as of Postfix 2.1. +# +sample_directory = /etc/postfix + +# readme_directory: The location of the Postfix README files. +# +readme_directory = no diff --git a/config/postfix/master.cf b/config/postfix/master.cf new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..3833ad6b4b --- /dev/null +++ b/config/postfix/master.cf @@ -0,0 +1,79 @@ +# +# Postfix master process configuration file. For details on the format +# of the file, see the Postfix master(5) manual page. +# +# ========================================================================== +# service type private unpriv chroot wakeup maxproc command + args +# (yes) (yes) (yes) (never) (100) +# ========================================================================== +smtp inet n - n - - smtpd +#submission inet n - n - - smtpd +# -o smtpd_etrn_restrictions=reject +# -o smtpd_client_restrictions=permit_sasl_authenticated,reject +#smtps inet n - n - - smtpd +# -o smtpd_tls_wrappermode=yes -o smtpd_sasl_auth_enable=yes +#submission inet n - n - - smtpd +# -o smtpd_etrn_restrictions=reject +# -o smtpd_enforce_tls=yes -o smtpd_sasl_auth_enable=yes +#628 inet n - n - - qmqpd +pickup fifo n - n 60 1 pickup +cleanup unix n - n - 0 cleanup +qmgr fifo n - n 300 1 qmgr +#qmgr fifo n - n 300 1 oqmgr +tlsmgr unix - - n 1000? 1 tlsmgr +rewrite unix - - n - - trivial-rewrite +bounce unix - - n - 0 bounce +defer unix - - n - 0 bounce +trace unix - - n - 0 bounce +verify unix - - n - 1 verify +flush unix n - n 1000? 0 flush +proxymap unix - - n - - proxymap +smtp unix - - n - - smtp +# When relaying mail as backup MX, disable fallback_relay to avoid MX loops +relay unix - - n - - smtp + -o fallback_relay= +# -o smtp_helo_timeout=5 -o smtp_connect_timeout=5 +showq unix n - n - - showq +error unix - - n - - error +discard unix - - n - - discard +local unix - n n - - local +virtual unix - n n - - virtual +lmtp unix - - n - - lmtp +anvil unix - - n - 1 anvil +scache unix - - n - 1 scache +# +# ==================================================================== +# Interfaces to non-Postfix software. Be sure to examine the manual +# pages of the non-Postfix software to find out what options it wants. +# +# Many of the following services use the Postfix pipe(8) delivery +# agent. See the pipe(8) man page for information about ${recipient} +# and other message envelope options. +# ==================================================================== +# +# maildrop. See the Postfix MAILDROP_README file for details. +# Also specify in main.cf: maildrop_destination_recipient_limit=1 +# +maildrop unix - n n - - pipe + flags=DRhu user=vmail argv=/usr/local/bin/maildrop -d ${recipient} +# +# The Cyrus deliver program has changed incompatibly, multiple times. +# +old-cyrus unix - n n - - pipe + flags=R user=cyrus argv=/cyrus/bin/deliver -e -m ${extension} ${user} +# Cyrus 2.1.5 (Amos Gouaux) +# Also specify in main.cf: cyrus_destination_recipient_limit=1 +cyrus unix - n n - - pipe + user=cyrus argv=/cyrus/bin/deliver -e -r ${sender} -m ${extension} ${user} +# +# See the Postfix UUCP_README file for configuration details. +# +uucp unix - n n - - pipe + flags=Fqhu user=uucp argv=uux -r -n -z -a$sender - $nexthop!rmail ($recipient) +# +# Other external delivery methods. +# +ifmail unix - n n - - pipe + flags=F user=ftn argv=/usr/lib/ifmail/ifmail -r $nexthop ($recipient) +bsmtp unix - n n - - pipe + flags=Fq. user=foo argv=/usr/local/sbin/bsmtp -f $sender $nexthop $recipient diff --git a/config/postfix/relocated b/config/postfix/relocated new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..a14d032276 --- /dev/null +++ b/config/postfix/relocated @@ -0,0 +1,163 @@ +# RELOCATED(5) RELOCATED(5) +# +# NAME +# relocated - Postfix relocated table format +# +# SYNOPSIS +# postmap /etc/postfix/relocated +# +# DESCRIPTION +# The optional relocated(5) table provides the information +# that is used in "user has moved to new_location" bounce +# messages. +# +# Normally, the relocated(5) table is specified as a text +# file that serves as input to the postmap(1) command. The +# result, an indexed file in dbm or db format, is used for +# fast searching by the mail system. Execute the command +# "postmap /etc/postfix/relocated" in order to rebuild the +# indexed file after changing the relocated table. +# +# When the table is provided via other means such as NIS, +# LDAP or SQL, the same lookups are done as for ordinary +# indexed files. +# +# Alternatively, the table can be provided as a regular- +# expression map where patterns are given as regular expres- +# sions, or lookups can be directed to TCP-based server. In +# that case, the lookups are done in a slightly different +# way as described below under "REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES" +# and "TCP-BASED TABLES". +# +# Table lookups are case insensitive. +# +# TABLE FORMAT +# The input format for the postmap(1) command is as follows: +# +# o An entry has one of the following form: +# pattern new_location +# Where new_location specifies contact information +# such as an email address, or perhaps a street +# address or telephone number. +# +# o Empty lines and whitespace-only lines are ignored, +# as are lines whose first non-whitespace character +# is a `#'. +# +# o A logical line starts with non-whitespace text. A +# line that starts with whitespace continues a logi- +# cal line. +# +# TABLE SEARCH ORDER +# With lookups from indexed files such as DB or DBM, or from +# networked tables such as NIS, LDAP or SQL, patterns are +# tried in the order as listed below: +# +# user@domain +# Matches user@domain. This form has precedence over +# all other forms. +# +# user Matches user@site when site is $myorigin, when site +# is listed in $mydestination, or when site is listed +# in $inet_interfaces or $proxy_interfaces. +# +# @domain +# Matches other addresses in domain. This form has +# the lowest precedence. +# +# ADDRESS EXTENSION +# When a mail address localpart contains the optional recip- +# ient delimiter (e.g., user+foo@domain), the lookup order +# becomes: user+foo@domain, user@domain, user+foo, user, and +# @domain. +# +# REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES +# This section describes how the table lookups change when +# the table is given in the form of regular expressions or +# when lookups are directed to a TCP-based server. For a +# description of regular expression lookup table syntax, see +# regexp_table(5) or pcre_table(5). For a description of the +# TCP client/server table lookup protocol, see tcp_table(5). +# This feature is not available up to and including Postfix +# version 2.2. +# +# Each pattern is a regular expression that is applied to +# the entire address being looked up. Thus, user@domain mail +# addresses are not broken up into their user and @domain +# constituent parts, nor is user+foo broken up into user and +# foo. +# +# Patterns are applied in the order as specified in the ta- +# ble, until a pattern is found that matches the search +# string. +# +# Results are the same as with indexed file lookups, with +# the additional feature that parenthesized substrings from +# the pattern can be interpolated as $1, $2 and so on. +# +# TCP-BASED TABLES +# This section describes how the table lookups change when +# lookups are directed to a TCP-based server. For a descrip- +# tion of the TCP client/server lookup protocol, see tcp_ta- +# ble(5). This feature is not available up to and including +# Postfix version 2.2. +# +# Each lookup operation uses the entire address once. Thus, +# user@domain mail addresses are not broken up into their +# user and @domain constituent parts, nor is user+foo broken +# up into user and foo. +# +# Results are the same as with indexed file lookups. +# +# BUGS +# The table format does not understand quoting conventions. +# +# CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS +# The following main.cf parameters are especially relevant. +# The text below provides only a parameter summary. See +# postconf(5) for more details including examples. +# +# relocated_maps +# List of lookup tables for relocated users or sites. +# +# Other parameters of interest: +# +# inet_interfaces +# The network interface addresses that this system +# receives mail on. You need to stop and start Post- +# fix when this parameter changes. +# +# mydestination +# List of domains that this mail system considers +# local. +# +# myorigin +# The domain that is appended to locally-posted mail. +# +# proxy_interfaces +# Other interfaces that this machine receives mail on +# by way of a proxy agent or network address transla- +# tor. +# +# SEE ALSO +# trivial-rewrite(8), address resolver +# postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager +# postconf(5), configuration parameters +# +# README FILES +# Use "postconf readme_directory" or "postconf html_direc- +# tory" to locate this information. +# DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview +# ADDRESS_REWRITING_README, address rewriting guide +# +# LICENSE +# The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this +# software. +# +# AUTHOR(S) +# Wietse Venema +# IBM T.J. Watson Research +# P.O. Box 704 +# Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, USA +# +# RELOCATED(5) diff --git a/config/postfix/transport b/config/postfix/transport new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..2df6aed477 --- /dev/null +++ b/config/postfix/transport @@ -0,0 +1,272 @@ +# TRANSPORT(5) TRANSPORT(5) +# +# NAME +# transport - Postfix transport table format +# +# SYNOPSIS +# postmap /etc/postfix/transport +# +# postmap -q "string" /etc/postfix/transport +# +# postmap -q - /etc/postfix/transport